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Sudanese sceptical as rivals agree to new ceasefire

Black smoke covers the sky above the capital Khartoum on 19 April
Black smoke covers the sky above the capital Khartoum on 19 April

Heavy clashes have again rocked Sudan's capital hours after rival generals agreed to an upcoming one-week ceasefire, the latest in a series of truces that have been systematically violated.

The ceasefire is set to take effect tomorrow evening, the United States and Saudi Arabia said in a joint statement after talks in the Saudi city of Jeddah.

It "shall remain in effect for seven days and may be extended with the agreement of both parties", the statement added.

In a statement published today by the official Saudi Press Agency, Riyadh acknowledged multiple truces have been violated since fighting broke out on 15 April.

"Unlike previous ceasefires, the agreement reached in Jeddah was signed by the parties and will be supported by a US-Saudi and international-supported ceasefire monitoring mechanism," the foreign ministry said.

But Khartoum residents - who for weeks have been sheltering from brutal urban warfare amid desperately low supplies of food and vital resources - were sceptical that this time would be any different.

"They have announced truces that they have not held to before," said Hussein Mohammed, who remains in Khartoum North, sheltering in place with his sick mother even as their neighbourhood became deserted.

"We hope that this time mediators can monitor that the ceasefire is implemented," he told AFP.

The fighting pits the Sudanese army, led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, against the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), led by Burhan's former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.

The intense battles have killed around 1,000 people and displaced over one million, with millions more trapped with sporadic access to water, electricity or medicine.

Many have been separated from their families, just a few kilometres away, by unrelenting gunfire.

Along with the capital, the war-scarred western region of Darfur has seen some the worst of the fighting.

In Khartoum, doctors have repeatedly condemned bombardments on hospitals which have come under attack by both the air force's fighter jets and the RSF's artillery.

Residents of densely-populated neighbourhoods have accused RSF fighters of widespread break-ins and looting.

Civilians and aid agencies have for weeks pleaded for both sides to secure humanitarian corridors to let in urgently needed assistance.

In the Vatican today, Pope Francis welcomed "the partial agreements reached so far" but called "on the international community to spare no effort... to ease the suffering of the population".

With most banks shuttered, warehouses and factories looted, attacked and burned, and fuel in scarce supply, access to food across Sudan is becoming increasingly difficult.

Currently, 25 million people - more than half of the population - need humanitarian aid, the highest number the United Nations has ever recorded in the country.

A prolonged conflict, which analysts warn is likely, will cause millions more to become food insecure and push a million people to flee into neighbouring countries, according to the UN.